Blog Layout

Making life's transitions with ease and grace

Susan Grandfield • 22 September 2022

"It's not the changes that do you in, it's the transitions"

As we transition from summer to autumn and notice the changes that are going on around us – leaves turning from green to red, yellow and orange, the air feeling colder on the skin, the light becoming more muted – there is also an opportunity to notice the changes that are going on in the inner environment too.

 

No matter what stage of life we are in, we are always experiencing some sort of transition. Sometimes the transitions happen almost undetected, we barely notice them happening until we look in the mirror one day and see that the there are a few more lines appearing on the face or grey in the hair.   Other transitions can feel like a tsunami; picking us up, tossing us around, leaving us bereft with no sense of where we find ourselves now.

 

What transitions are you going through right now?

 

It may be the beginning or ending of a relationship, a change of career or job, menopause, adjusting to children having left home, caring for those who used to care for you.

 

What is the experience like for you?

 

At some point each of these is likely to feel confusing, disorienting and destabilising as we find ourselves stuck in limbo between life as it was before and life as it will be now. There is great power in choosing to give ourselves time to step back from the busy day to day activity and reactivity and open up to our inner wisdom on how to navigate whatever we are experiencing with more grace and ease. 


 

I am reminded of a quote from William Bridges:

 

“It’s not the changes that do you in it’s the transitions”

 

We experience change all the time and whether we like what the change brings or not, as a human being, we have developed a tremendous capacity to adapt and adjust to the new. Responding to a change is usually done at the level of behaviour change.  For example, during the COIVD pandemic the vast majority of us changed our behaviour overnight – staying at home, wearing masks, testing ourselves regularly.  (Have you noticed how quickly many have adjusted our behaviour back to how it was before?).

 

We can change and change again often quite quickly and we can become skillful at doing things differently. However, that is just part of the equation. There is also something that needs to happen on the inside if we are to make true and lasting changes AND if we are do so with more ease. That is what Bridges refers to as the transitions.


 

“Every transition always starts with an ending. To become something else, you have to stop being what you are now; to start doing things a new way, you have to end the way you are doing them now; and to develop a new attitude or outlook, you have to let go of the old”.


 

That is the hard part! That is the inner work.


It is about turning attention inwards and allowing ourselves to acknowledge what is really going on in the midst of the external changes. It is about building our inner resources so that we can reconnect with the balance, stability and confidence that will help us navigate the transition. It is about showing ourselves the care, compassion and kindness that we would offer to someone else who was finding things difficult.


The natural world around us is going through a constant cycle of change and renewal and when we slow down enough to really notice, we can take inspiration from it which will support us on our own cycle of renewal. There is no struggle as a leaf falls from the tree, the tree effortlessly lets go. There is no emotional turmoil as the squirrel prepares for hibernation, it devotes to time preparing and doing what it knows it needs to do. The sun doesn’t fight to stay in the sky longer, it allows the moon to appear sooner turning the day to night.


Learning to prepare ourselves, to let go, to allow are all part of making life’s transitions with more ease and grace. Knowing that is what we need to do and actually doing it are two different things and that is why it can be helpful to practice doing so with the support of a kind, compassionate and wise community. Stepping back from the busy-ness, the reactivity, the pressure from others and giving yourself space to really explore what it is you need from yourself in your own transition is perhaps the best act of self-care you can offer yourself. 


It is for both of those reasons that I run regular mindfulness based retreats in the nourishing and stunning Perthshire countryside. I hear the impact they have on people who are willing to invest in themselves and put themselves at the top of their priority list for a change!


Whatever transition you are facing or in the middle of, you are invited to join me for my next retreat – 12th & 13th November – at Burmieston Farm & Steading. All of the details are on the here on my website where you can also connect with me to ask any questions or to book your place



Give yourself the gift of your own attention.

What do you need help with?

by Susan Grandfield 28 October 2024
Part 4 - the way forward In this final part of the series, we are looking at the way forward. What does this awakening mean and how do we stay on the path that we’ve started to walk down?
Self-acceptance and allowing are key to the journey of being who we are in the world.
by Susan Grandfield 21 October 2024
This is an invitation to be curious about the freedom that comes from finally letting go of the need to fit in, to embrace how you see the world and how you want to approach life and the ripple effect that can have on the lives of those around you. It is all about self-acceptance and allowing.
There is a struggle when we set out on a quest to be who we are more in the world.
by Susan Grandfield 14 October 2024
The struggle of an idealist in a world of pessimists, pragmatists and realists is that at times it can feel very lonely, like we’re sitting on the edge of the crowd not being invited into the conversation. Everyone is looking in one direction and when we point out that there is another direction they could look in we feel dismissed, not heard and ridiculed for romantic notions about the world. But it doesn't have to feel that way.
We need more idealism in the world to balance the pessimism
by Susan Grandfield 8 October 2024
Idealist: “Someone who believes that very good things can be achieved, often when this does not seem likely to others”. Rather than hiding away, agreeing with others, making myself wrong for holding a more hopeful view of the world or criticising myself for being naïve I backed myself and stood behind my beliefs.
Find your way back to balance, ease and contentment and really start living.
by Susan Grandfield 19 August 2024
We are under the misapprehension that we need to push ourselves outside our comfort zone if we really want to experience life and be successful. But that is not true. Finding our way back to our comfort zone is a vital part of experiencing life with more ease, enjoyment and freedom.
Lighter way to uncover wisdom
by Susan Grandfield 3 July 2024
The reality of life is that we forget and fall into the predictable traps of the ego and its susceptibility to the outside world but that finding our way back to inner peace and stability comes from remembering that our experience is created from the inside.
Discover how changing the stories you tell yourself about yourself can transform your life.
by Susan Grandfield 27 May 2024
We are incredibly talented at creating fictitious stories about ourselves and going through life without editing them, updating them or realising we can actually re-write them. Discovering how quickly life can change when you start to pay attention to your stories.
Go on an adventure of a lifetime
by Susan Grandfield 7 February 2024
We begin this adventure of a lifetime as wide open, expansive, creative, loving, curious and innately wise little beings full of possibility, potential and optimism. But through our experience of interacting with others and the world around us we, unconsciously, wrap ourselves up in patterns of behaving and thinking which serve to protect us from the perceived risk of following that childlike energy. Now is the time to "unwrap" those protective layers and reconnect with who we really are.
There is a real freedom in approaching things with an experimental mindset .
by Susan Grandfield 30 January 2024
Experimenting is fundamentally about trying things out and not being attached to a particular outcome. It is about giving things a go and learning from whatever happens. There is a real freedom in approaching things with an experimental mindset and I believe it can be brought to all aspects of our lives.
Bliss, joy, gratitude, peace, moments to just be
by Susan Grandfield 22 September 2023
Like me, are you also someone who tends to plan moments of bliss rather than allow them to happen? Ridiculous as that may sound, I realise that when I am in my familiar environment doing familiar and routine activities I tend to plan for moments of bliss or joy to happen sometime in the future, when all of the things I need to do have been done. I am discovering the possibility of experiencing moments of bliss at any time and without the preplanning.
More posts
Share by: